The award and what the rhetoric heard at the event seems to imply is absurd.

It is difficult to read some of the president's remarks without wincing

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President Obama was in Los Angeles this week to hobnob with some of his biggest fans in Hollywood. He gave his usual stump speech blaming the Republicans for all the country's ills at a private fundraiser where he rubbed elbows with Barbra Streisand and Jeffrey Katzenberg.

After that, he attended a gala for Steven Spielberg's Shoah Foundation where he was honored with the organization's Ambassador of Humanity Award and where he listened to Conan O'Brien tell jokes about Donald Sterling and was serenaded by Bruce Springsteen.

Showering Democratic presidents with love and cash is what Hollywood liberals do and there's no point complaining about it. Obama's award was, no doubt, part of the price for getting him to show up at the event.

But like the undeserved Nobel Peace Prize that he collected in the first year of his presidency, the notion that he is in some way deserving of an honor that is linked to a Holocaust memorial or the fight against the current crop of international despots that threaten world peace is hard to swallow.

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While much of what he said in accepting this award about opposing anti-Semitism and defending the State of Israel was praiseworthy, it is difficult to read some of the president's remarks at the event without wincing.

Writing in Commentary magazine's blog, Michael Rubin observed that Obama's United Nations ambassador, Samantha Power's disconnect between this administration's rhetorical flourishes about its opposition to human-rights violators and the reality of what it is actually doingor to be more precise, what it is not doingis staggering.

Let's specify that Spielberg's Foundation, which centers on collecting the testimony of Holocaust survivors, is very much to the famous director's credit. Like his film Schindler's List, which led Spielberg to take up this work, it is a worthy effort to preserve the memory of the victims and the crimes of the Nazis and their collaborators.

But the notion that Obama's policies have been inspired by the imperative that the world not stand by silently when other crimes against humanity are committed, as the award and the rhetoric heard at the event seem to imply, is absurd.

During his speech, the president spoke both of the hate that still stalks the globe and the challenges this creates:

We only need to look at today's headlines  the devastation of Syria, the murders and kidnappings in Nigeria, sectarian conflict, the tribal conflicts to see that we have not yet extinguished man's darkest impulses. There are some bad stories out there that are being told to children, and they're learning to hate early. They're learning to fear those who are not like them early.

And none of the tragedies that we see today may rise to the full horror of the Holocaust  the individuals who are the victims of such unspeakable cruelty, they make a claim on our conscience. They demand our attention, that we not turn away, that we choose empathy over indifference and that our empathy leads to action. And that's not always easy. One of the powerful things about Schindler's story was recognizing that we have to act even where there is sometimes ambiguity; even when the path is not always clearly lit, we have to try.

That's all quite true. But coming from the mouth of the man who has stood by impotently as the Syrian tragedy escalated into a conflict that has taken up to 150,000 lives including perhaps as many as 11,000 children, Obama's pieties about remembering the Holocaust ring hollow.

In Syria a small-scale conflict centering on the efforts of a brutal dictator to remain in power might have been ended quickly by a decisive Western intervention. But since Obama preferred, as is his wont, to "lead from behind," it grew into a bloody war in which Assad, assisted by the operatives of Iran and Hezbollah and supported by Russia, has slaughtered the Syrian people by the tens of thousands.

Like Power's astonishing rhetoric about the need for action against such crimes, Obama's words give new meaning to the word hypocrisy.
But while he basked in the glow of Hollywood's approval and honor for his supposed stand for human rights, it should be remembered that this is also the president who is trying desperately to appease and craft a new détente with perhaps the most brutal anti-Semitic regime in the world in Iran.

While Iran's leaders have denied the Holocaust and threatened the globe with the possibility of a new one via their drive for nuclear weapons, Obama has been consistently slow to enact sanctions and seems determined to forge new bonds with a government that embodies all that he purports to oppose. His diplomacy that is supposed to be aimed at stopping the Iranian nuclear threat is instead empowering the regime and only seeking to delay their move toward a bomb.

No one should begrudge the president the right to defend his policy of impotence on Syrian atrocities or his inability to even make good on the enforcement of his "red line" on Assad's use of chemical weapons against civilians. Nor should we deny him the opportunity to justify his drive toward appeasement of Iran.

But that he should do so while claiming to honor the memory of the Holocaust and the need for the U.S. never to stand by again while such horrors are perpetrated is intolerable.